Review of Northern Lights, the Molinari Quartet and Vincent Boilard | Allow the music to exist

Oboist Vincent Boilard and the Quatuor Molinari unearth forgotten and often fascinating scores by Canadian composers.


In the booklet of his first disc, produced with the Molinari Quartet for ATMA, the associate principal oboe of the Orchester symphonique de Montréal Vincent Boilard quotes these words from his Hungarian colleague Lajoc Lencsés: “I want to record totally unknown pieces that sleep somewhere […] simply to allow them to exist. They have to be recorded so that we can listen to them and be interested in them. Without registration, these parts do not exist. If music only exists on paper, it dies. »

Boilard’s noble quest led him to the Canadian repertoire for string quartet and oboe, a formation that is far from roaming the streets. The musician nevertheless unearthed four scores by English-speaking composers from the same generation (they were born between 1942 and 1948): Stewart Grant, Elizabeth Raum, Michael Parker and Brian Cherney. All are still alive, with the exception of Parker, who disappeared in 2017.

Was it right, finally, to unearth these works composed between 1987 and 2000? The interest is growing as the disc progresses. There Camera Serenata by conductor and oboist Stewart Grant, who opens the album, is relatively forgettable. It is understood that a serenade keeps a rather light character, but the melodic and harmonic material is not of very great interest.

We are already at another level with Searching for Sophia by the very prolific Elizabeth Raum, also a professional oboist. The idiom is still rather romantic, but the avowed oriental inspiration (the composer’s grandparents were Syrian) gives the three movements a particular flavor.

Also in three movements, Requiem parentibus, composed after the death of Michael Parker’s father, takes us completely elsewhere. The violist, whose career has essentially taken place in Newfoundland, deploys sumptuous harmonies there in an atmosphere often reminiscent of the Vienna School. The oboe is also much more integrated within the strings than in previous works.

In the Stillness of the Summer Wind by Brian Cherney, a professor at McGill University since the 1970s, manages to transport us to another world with a remarkable economy of means.

Boilard and the Molinari play all this with admirable commitment and a control of the sound always adapted to the musical intentions.

The acoustics of the Saint-Augustin de Mirabel church is perhaps less appropriate for this kind of instrumental formation and repertoire, however, the passages mark losing impact due to reverberation.

northern lights

Classical music

northern lights

Molinari Quartet and Vincent Boilard

ATMA Classic

7.5/10


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